"The letter to Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, the EU's competition regulator, comes from search and travel sites, and the Open Internet Project, which is backed by publisher Axel Springer and Getty Images."
So, what you're saying is that companies which compete with Google would like Google to be broken up so they don't have to compete with Google.
"Google has pushed the pendulum of technology to the absolute limit of commoditisation," he said, "to the point where people who spent their whole lives developing really valuable compelling entertainment, and really valuable compelling journalism, and really valuable compelling novels can't make money doing it any more."
[citation needed]
From my perspective, we're in a golden age of television, where we're getting "really compelling entertainment." "Really valuable compelling journalism" has largely been killed by the Internet generally, specifically by the expectation that you can get content for free (or paid for by advertising), but that trend began well before Google came on the scene. As for the novels, if anyone is to blame for shafting novelists, it's a combination of Amazon and the publishers.
As an anti-Google hit piece, I give this article 2/10. Must try harder.